> I still do not understand how you have made a stronger case
I have the stronger case because you have not expressed a case. I'm left to assume you have none, and therefore mine is stronger by default if not by weight. I at least have a case.
> there are a few things I dont agree with.
I would expect there are many things I said that you don't agree with. It neither makes them incorrect or weak, just not in your wheelhouse.
> Seems wrong when you say the universe had to have a powerfull timeless eternal personal cause. What even is a timeless cause? What are you basing this on aside from the god narrative?
Scientists speculate that before the Big Bang, time did not exist. According to Kalam's cosmological argument, if the universe had no beginning, we would have no present. Only if the past is finite can there be a present, so the sufficient cause to effect the Big Bang must have been timeless.
Stephen Hawking, in his lecture on the Beginning of Time, says that all the matter of the universe would have been on top of itself and the density would have been infinite. Physics breaks down at the singularity. Hawking, in an interview with Neil degrasse Tyson, likened the space-time dimensions of the Big Bang to the South Pole. "There is nothing south of the South Pole, so there was nothing around before the Big Bang," he said.
Therefore, whatever caused the Big Bang must have been timeless.
> We have a lot of data in big bang cosmology, arguably more than the pages of your chosen holy text.
Of course science says more about Big Bang cosmology than the Bible. The question at hand is not which book says more.
> Are you claiming big bang cosmology is all wrong, or partially wrong?
Not at all. I'm all about the Big Bang. I'm just inferring the most reasonable conclusion that the causal mechanism for it was more reasonably God, who did exist and was powerful and timeless, than nature, which didn't exist and can't self-generate out of non-existence.
> theism does not easily explain it.
But it does. The existence of an omnipotent, eternal, orderly, function personal being easily explains the beginning of the universe out of a singularity. With His great power and wisdom He "created." What we end up with is something orderly, functional, and personal. There is a sufficiency of explanation at hand here.
> which adds even more complexity.
It actually adds simplicity (though not non-complexity). There is straight line of logic and science, assuming God exists, from God to creation.
> please advise how he created the universe,
He created by His powerful word and wisdom, but His power over nature and its processes. It's quite straightforward.
> hiw this god was created
There must be something that's eternal. Something has to have always existed. Since scientists tell us that nature, natural laws, and physics didn't always exist (and certainly not chemistry or biology), then some other entity is eternal. If this entity is separate from nature, powerful, timeless, and personal (since only personal causes can be first causes), then God is a reasonable direction for a explanation.
> how you get from that to your chosen deity, Jesus.
If there is a God, then we have to weigh the logic and concordance with reality of the various explanations for who this God is and what He is like. The biblical God, by my assessment of evidences, accords better with reality, history, and humanity than Allah, Thor, Vishnu or Krishna. An examination of comparative religions has brought me to this conclusion.
> Oh, intelligent design? No, I dont think I will touch this once since it has been, by court case Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District (as well as numerous others without religious bias) viewed as not science.
No, I'm not talking about the movement "Intelligent Design." I'm talking about the elements and characteristics of the universe that reflect that the universe shows signs of having been devised, arranged, and purposed. I'm not arguing for the current position known as "Intelligent Design." I'm not on that boat.
> You are adding purpose to things not there.
?????? I've only attributed purpose to that which exists and is really there. I don't know what you mean by this criticism.
> Fine tuning eh? Again with the psuedo science.
There's nothing pseudo-science about fine-tuning. See, you're so quick to deprecate, but I wonder if you've thought all this through (or if you even have a competing position that's stronger. I have yet to see one.)
- Brandon Carr and Martin Rees: "The basic features of galaxies, stars, planets, and the everyday world are essentially determined by a few microphysical constants and by the effects of gravitation….several aspects of our Universe—some of which seem to be prerequisites for the evolution of any form of life—depend rather delicately on apparent 'coincidences' among the physical constants." For example, if the force of gravity were even slightly stronger, all stars would be blue giants; if even slightly weaker, all would be red dwarfs; in neither case could life have developed. The same goes for the weak and strong nuclear forces; if either had been even slightly different, life, at any rate life even remotely similar to the sort we have, could probably not have developed.
- Stephen Hawking: The existence of life also seems to depend very delicately on the rate at which the universe is expanding. Hawking says that "reduction of the rate of expansion by one part in 10^12 at the time when the temperature of the Universe was 10^10 K would have resulted in the Universe starting to recollapse when its radius was only 1/3000 of the present value and the temperature was still 10,000 deg"—much too warm for comfort. Hawking concludes that life is possible only because the universe is expanding at *just the rate required* to avoid collapse. At an earlier time, the fine-tuning had to be even more remarkable. John Polkinghorne adds: "We know that there has to have been a very close balance between the competing effect of explosive expansion and gravitational contraction which, at the very earliest epoch about which we can even pretend to speak (called the Planck time, 10^-43 sec. after the big bang) would have corresponded to the incredible degree of accuracy represented by a deviation in their ratio from unity by only one part in 10^60."
- Paul Davies: "The fact that these relations are necessary for our existence is one of the most fascinating discoveries of modern science."
I don't know why you call it pseudo-science. There are things like...
- the cosmic microwave background radiation
- the mass of protons, neutrons, and electrons
- the speed of light
- electron charge
- Planck's constant
- the electrical permittivity of a vacuum.
- the ratio of protons to neutrons
- the strong nuclear force
- Earth's orbit around the sun
- the size, density, mass, and distance of our sun from Earth
- The Earth's gravity
- the properties of the carbon atom
- the ratio of the electromagnetic force to gravity
- the measure of the nuclear efficiency of fusion from hydrogen to helium
- the cosmological constant
Pseudo-science????
There are about 60 of these tight parameters required for life in the universe. These boundary conditions of our universe and the laws of its evolution are of a very special kind which alone could lead to the evolution of intelligent life and in fact make it probable. It provides a good inductive argument for the existence of God. The basic idea is that, if there is a God, such fine-tuning is not at all surprising or improbable. If it's all by natural circumstance following an explosion, it is exceeding improbable that all 60 would line up perfectly and be fine-tuned for life.
> You are quick to dismiss some science (natural selection in particular)
I haven't dismissed ANY science.
> I believe that naturalism or atheism is more honest by examining evidence with less bias.
Let's see your evidence. Let's see your case. I'm genuinely curious.
> because since you are religious you have no outsider test for your faith
Of course we do. Christianity is both historical and evidentiary.
> Faith. You know faith has 2 meanings, right?
Faith actually has 4 or 5 meanings.
- Faith is "complete trust or confidence in someone or something." This is the commonplace use of the word apart from any religious significance, such as when a person has faith in a chair to support his weight or has faith in his employee to do a job well.
- Faith is "firm belief in something for which there is no proof." This is the definition unbelievers often use to ridicule believers, insisting that they, unlike religious people, trust only in that which is demonstrable. This is not the biblical definition of faith.
- Faith is "belief in, trust in, and loyalty to God." This is an explicitly religious definition, in many ways similar to the theological definition of faith as involving knowledge, assent, and trust. Faith here is pictured as going beyond belief in certain facts to include commitment to and dependence on God.
- Faith is "a system of religious beliefs." This is what is meant when one speaks of "the Protestant faith" or "the Jewish faith." What is largely in view here is a set of doctrines. The Bible uses the word in this way in passages such as Jude 3.
I use faith, as I believe Hebrews 11.1 does, in the first sense: confidence based on evidence. In the Bible, faith is evidentiary (choice #1 above).
> If you used that faith to defend your views, instead of the psuedo science and trying to redefine faith that you have done here, I would actually have more respect for your views
I have used neither faith nor pseudo-science, but rather the evidence: logical, scientific, and historical.
So, if your case is stronger than mine, if you don't follow Christianity because their case is not strong enough, and if you follow real science (as do I), let's see your case for "naturalism or atheism" that is not only more honest, but stronger and more substantial.
Happy New Year to you, too. May you have a good one.